My FEL has developed a cup in the center of the bucket. Sort of like a spout at the center. Is there any way to straighten this out. Any help would be appreciated.
Some times heat and a big hammer may work or as suggested jacks, chains etc.
You may want to look at installing a heavier cutting edge. This will help stengthen the bucket.
Another possibility is that you have worn down the bottom of the bucket till it is easy to bend. That may entail welding a plate on the bottom of the bucket. I had to do that with mine.
I often buy older tractors just to fix 'em up and resell, so straightening bent buckets has been a regular thing for me. If you have a backhoe handy then use the stabilizer as a ram. It works the best. First remove the bent bucket than position it under the stabilizer and apply pressure. Hydraulic jacks also work, but be careful as they can fly out when under the spring like tension and hurt you, the backhoe stabliizer won't do that. Using a torch will make the metal bend easier but you run a high risk of loosing the metal's temper thus making it soft and even more apt to bend again.
If you get that bucket straight I'd sure weld some 3/8 stock on the under side to keep it that way
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( heat and a big hammer )</font>
Maybe together, but one thing that doesn't work is just an 8# sledge hammer. Only makes your ears ring for an hour or so, and you can guess how I know that. /forums/images/graemlins/wink.gif
The best thing that I had luck with is a floor jack. Put a 4x4 or 6x6 block on top of the jack pad, then jack. Remember that given the elasticity, you will have to over bend it and let it come back to straight.
I have a better picture, but I left the camera at the lake. This one I took with my cell phone Saturday, straightening the top of the bucket. Did the same with the bottom lip before putting a new cutting edge on. Oak trees push over hard. By the way, I left the old cutting edge on and just welded the new one under it. Seems to work good, and has more steel there for support, and saved a lot of cutting.
Thanks everyone for all the suggestions. I'll try the jacks and the chain method first as I don't have access to a backhoe. I also see a 1 ton chain hoist possibly come into this picture. I don't know just yet how I'll do that, but a chain hoist does come into the picture.